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CHAPTER IV - HISTORY OF THE ASTOR FREE LIBRARY OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK; WITH SOME NOTICE OF ITS FOUNDER

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 October 2010

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Summary

The Founder of the Astor Library

John Jacob Astor was a native of the village of Waldorf, in the Duchy of Baden, where he was born on the 17th of July, 1763. He left his birthplace to seek his fortune in a wider sphere of labour, before he was nineteen years old. After a brief stay in London, he set out for America in the autumn of 1783, but the March of 1784 had arrived, before the vessel in which he sailed landed him at Baltimore. An incident that grew out of the unexpected detention on shipboard gave, as it seems, an impulse and direction to his whole subsequent life.

When he left England, it appears to have been Astor's purpose to establish himself as a dealer in musical instruments. An elder brother, who had settled in London some years earlier, was already in that trade, and by him Jacob Astor was supplied with a consignment of goods for the American market. When his ship got into Chesapeake Bay the ice-masses of an unusually fierce winter kept it there, weatherbound, for almost three months. To a youthful passenger of sanguine temperament, just entering on active life, and resolutely bent on so wooing Fortune as to win her, it must needs have been a weary time. He wiled away some of the long days of detention by interminable conversations with a German fellow-traveller.

Type
Chapter
Information
Free Town Libraries, their Formation, Management, and History
In Britain, France, Germany, and America
, pp. 309 - 324
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010
First published in: 1869

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